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Posts tagged with lidijastag

There’s a great article today by Gail Collins in the NY Times (My State’s Prettier Than Yours) in which she tries to understand the promotional slogans of our 50 states. Give up Gail. It’s incomprehensible. State and country slogans have always been a pet peeve of mine because they usually don’t relate to anything distinct or different about the state. Collins gives plenty of examples. They’re usually a result of the excesses of bad advertising agencies or over zealous economic development and tourism teams.

There’s a list of state slogans at Wikipedia (List of U.S. state slogans) and 105 country tourism slogans at a blog called Tourist vs. Traveller (105 tourism slogans from around the world) along with a nice little video to show them all with their logos (which a lot of tourism development folks think is a brand, but that’s another topic entirely). Collins covers the states pretty well so I’ll focus on some of my favorite country slogans.

Did you know Albania is “A new Mediterranean love”? And all this time, I thought it was a mysterious country that supplies pizza parlor chefs to New York restaurants. Austria is “Arrive and revive”. I’m sorry. I don’t know what that means, particularly since I’ll have jet lag for a day or two once I arrive. Here’s one I like: Belarus is “Hospitality beyond borders.” Does that mean I have to leave the country for hospitality? One of my favorites is Romania because I’ve been there twice: “Explore the Carpathian garden.” Now, I never saw the Carpathians on either of my trips (hint: it’s a mountain range), but I suspect that slogan will mean a lot to the winner of any national geography bee.

You have to read the list yourself. It’s full of surprises. (Actually, I think that’s Connecticut’s slogan.) You can travel from Pure Russia to 100% Pure New Zealand in a few lines. (Maybe Russia only got to 90% so they didn’t want to tell us how pure they are.) “Bolivia awaits you”, which is nice to know since I probably won’t make it there for a few years. The “Dominican Republic has it all” so don’t confuse that with “Honduras, todo esta aqui.” They have it all too but only in Spanish. I also like “Paraguay, You have to feel it!”. I’ve been there too and I suppose they’re talking about their vicious mosquitoes.

Τhe amazing thing about all of these slogans for states and countries (cities have them too; don’t get me started) is that they say absolutely nothing about the country, its culture and what makes it distinct and different. Years ago, states had mottos or nicknames that said something about them and often appeared on auto license plates. Alabama was “The Cotton State”, Florida was “The Everglade State”; Georgia – “The Peach State”; Hawaii – “The Aloha State”; Michigan – “Winter Water Wonderland” and so on. Washington D.C. was “Nation’s Capital”, which tells me a lot and that no other state can say. Now, it’s become “The American Experience”, which is ironic since it’s never been a place that Sarah Palin went looking for her “real Americans”. As a child, I always loved the slogans on license plates and could recite a lot of them. They told me something different about each state and I wanted to visit them all. Now they all blend into a meaningless hodgepodge that I bet nobody but each state’s tourism employees can recite. It’s bad for the state or country, self-aggrandizing and simply poor communication.

I used to live in Maine and often drive there for long weekends. We have a house there and a car with Maine plates that says “Vacationland”. I like that, although I also like that it’s been called “The Pine Tree State.” Sure, there are pine trees in other states but drive into Maine and you’ll think there must be more of them there than anyplace else and it does give you a picture. For many years, they had a slogan on a sign when you enter the state, “The way life should be.” Yes, it’s another one of those silly slogans but I have to admit that as someone who lived there for 25 years, seeing that sign always made me feel like I was home. It meant a way of life to me and I hoped for others visiting for the first time.

A few years ago, they added another sign about a 100 feet further down the road that read, “Worth a visit, worth a lifetime”, which signaled to me that they hired a new ad agency that wanted to establish its own brand of creativity. Then, a year or so ago, they plastered “Open for business” underneath “The way life should be.” I suppose it’s nice that the state is trying but did anyone check to see that Forbes put Maine last in its best for business rankings?

At its core, this is all about determining what a state or country’s marketing strategy is because slogans, if they have any purpose at all, should tell us why that place is worth our patronage for business, tourism or simply, aspirations. Anyone who pays attention to strategy knows that it must tell us why the product is both distinct and different from any other, and if that strategy is not true to what’s being delivered, it is totally meaningless. Slogans, however, have become a tactic conjured up by advertising or public relations agencies without a thought to strategy and that’s why they are incomprehensible and instantly forgettable.

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Stanford University Business School did a comparative study years ago on major factors that lead to a company's success. They studied an equal number of companies that had new business ideas. One group insisted on holding back until they felt they had perfected their product. The other felt their product was a little more than half ready but put it out to market early. The results a year later were startling. A significantly higher percentage of companies that went to market as soon as possible were well on their way to viability and profitability. Conversely, a significantly higher number of companies that thought they had perfected their product had failed or were heading in that direction. The reason? Immediate market feedback gave those companies that rushed to market the knowledge to better attune their products to market needs. The other companies had already used up their resources to apply to ongoing product improvement. Speed to market also applies to marketing campaigns. Quick to research, get feedback and adapt messaging makes for more successful campaigns. Velocity is a key factor in business success both for operations and marketing